Covenant Health is the most comprehensive health care network serving West Texas and Eastern New Mexico.

It is our mission to extend Christian ministry by caring for the whole person—body, mind and spirit—and by working with others to improve health and quality of life in our communities. We strive for sacred encounters and excellent care in every patient interaction.

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Covenant Health serves over 1.2 million people – and always strives to do it with the highest caliber of medical care. With one of the largest health systems in the entire region, our Christian mission of healing is accomplished with the help of the highly trained and distinguished doctors that make up our medical staff.

As a non-profit 501(c)(3) organization, separate from Covenant Health, Covenant Foundation reaches out to the community to secure funding for projects that assist the hospital. We strive to carry on the successful legacies of the St. Mary of the Plains Hospital Foundation and the Lubbock Methodist Hospital Foundation, two organizations that merged in 1998.

Part of Covenant Health’s mission is to ensure that everyone in our community has access to quality health care and health education. To do this, we offer educational classes, events and volunteer opportunities for the entire community.

About Us

History

Covenant Health is a member of St. Joseph Health, one of the most successful not-for-profit health systems in the United States. It was founded in 1998 through the merger of two of Lubbock's most venerable heath care facilities, St. Mary of the Plains Hospital and Lubbock Methodist Hospital System.

St. Mary Hospital was founded in 1937 as the 10-bed Plains Hospital and Clinic, becoming St. Mary of the Plains Hospital in 1939, when the Sisters of St. Joseph of Orange, California, purchased the facility. Today, St. Mary of the Plains Hospital is known as Covenant Medical Center–Lakeside.

The facility now known as Covenant Medical Center began as the 25-bed Lubbock Sanitarium in 1918. The facility became known as Lubbock General Hospital in 1941, then Lubbock Memorial Hospital in 1945. In 1954, it became Methodist Hospital.